In fact, you recognize the calls. Verne Lundquist offered the soundtrack for thus many iconic sports activities moments, from Jack Nicklaus’ Seventeenth-hole birdie putt on the 1986 Masters (“Sure, sir!”) to Christian Laettner’s jumper on the buzzer within the 1992 NCAA Match (“Sure!”) to Tiger Woods’ famed chip at No. 16 on the 2005 Masters (“In your life, have you ever seen something like that?!”) to Auburn’s kick-six within the 2013 Iron Bowl (“An answered prayer!”). So many extra, too.
However right here is one thing chances are you’ll not know: On the night time of Nov. 22, 1963, Lundquist was only a 23-year-old weekend sportscaster on tv and afternoon disc jockey at KTBC-AM-FM-TV, an Austin, Texas, radio-television station owned by Lyndon Johnson and his spouse, Girl Fowl. That night, he volunteered to drive CBS Information correspondent David Schoumacher and two different CBS staffers the 60 miles from Austin to Johnson Metropolis so they might interview buddies, kinfolk and highschool classmates of Johnson, who would quickly turn into President of the USA. He by no means forgot that night time. How might you?
However my favourite Verne story is how he met his spouse, Nancy. It’s one he instructed me a few years in the past for a Sports activities Illustrated piece. Right here it’s, in his personal phrases:
We met in a bar — and I hasten so as to add it was an upscale bar in Dallas. It was a spot referred to as Arthur’s. I walked in after I did the ten o’clock information (at WFAA-TV in Dallas) and I simply didn’t wish to go house. Nancy and her date had been on the bar and her date acknowledged me from native tv and invited me over to have a drink. He launched me to his date and her title was Nancy Miller. It was their first date, a blind date. So we sat and chatted and her date, Raymond Willie, mentioned to me, “Hear, I do know you’re single. I’m going to repair you up with a pal of mine and we will all go to dinner.” He checked out Nancy and requested her, “What are you doing Thursday night time?” She mentioned, “Nothing.” He mentioned, “Good, you’ll be my date and we’ll repair Verne up with this schoolteacher pal of mine and we’ll go to dinner.” In the meantime, I’m Nancy considering she is the prettiest factor I’ve ever seen in my life. So, Raymond lastly left to care for his enterprise and I requested Nancy, “So, how concerned are you with Raymond?” She mentioned, “Oh, that is our first date and it’s a blind date.” So I mentioned, “Nicely, overlook what he’s speaking about on Thursday night time. What are you doing on Saturday night time?” She mentioned, “I believe I’m doing no matter you’re doing.”
On Sunday afternoon, Lundquist signed off the air for the ultimate time at CBS Sports activities after working his fortieth Masters, a pleasant spherical quantity that he felt, at age 83, was the best way to exit.
“(CBS Sports activities chairman) Sean (McManus) and I had a dialog a few years in the past about what can be the correct time to exit stage left, and he and I agreed that 40 had a pleasant spherical really feel to it and that we’d exit from the Masters and CBS on the finish of the second week in April this 12 months,” Lundquist mentioned on a current convention name. “I’ve bought so many great recollections tied up with our visits to Augusta.”
It was an emotional week at Augusta for the CBS Sports activities employees due to the retirements of Lundquist and McManus, and Lundquist bought so many flowers from varied locations over this weekend, together with Augusta Nationwide, ESPN, The Washington Publish, and Golf Digest. CBS Sports activities ran a tribute that includes Verne and Nancy standing on the outlet the place we frequently heard him — No. 16.
“In your life have you ever seen something like that?”
In the case of the legendary profession of Verne Lundquist, the reply is not any.After 40 years at Augusta Nationwide, he says a fond farewell to the Masters. pic.twitter.com/9ZQSaKtPd5
— Golf on CBS ⛳ (@GolfonCBS) April 14, 2024
“They celebrated their forty second marriage ceremony anniversary this week on the Masters,” host Jim Nantz mentioned of the couple as CBS got here out of the video tribute. “And we might be celebrating you for so long as there’s a Masters Match, Verne Lundquist.”
Lundquist already had a profitable profession earlier than reaching the community degree. He was the radio voice of the Dallas Cowboys from 1972-84 and the sports activities director for WFAA-TV in Dallas. The “SEC on CBS” job was the primary as a lead broadcaster for Lundquist, who has labored for ABC Sports activities and Turner Sports activities along with CBS. McManus provided Lundquist the play-by-play function for SEC soccer in 2000, which quickly grew to become an enormous deal due to the SEC’s explosion nationally. It modified how sports activities followers noticed him too.
“(CBS) misplaced the NFL to Fox in 1994, and I stayed at CBS for one 12 months after that, after which a beautiful man, the late Mike Pearl who was our government producer of the Olympics, went to Turner Sports activities and invited me to return over there and I did for 2 years,” Lundquist mentioned. “I’ll always remember we had been in Nagano, Japan, and CBS had reacquired the rights to the NFL. Sean got here as much as me … earlier than the boys’s (determine skating) championships. We had about six or seven minutes to speak, and he tapped me on the shoulder and mentioned, ‘Are you prepared to return house?’ That’s in all probability the best query I’ve ever obtained in my life. So I got here again, and naturally, bought again within the Masters rotation. It’s been an incredible run. Hey, I’m 83 years previous. I’ve been blessed to have a sensational skilled life and a beautiful private life. I wasn’t the primary to say this, however thanks for the recollections.”
In 2016, I traveled to Baton Rouge to look at Lundquist and the CBS SEC soccer group work in Lundquist’s final season. What I noticed in particular person was how a lot the individuals round him cared for him. He was 76 on the time, and the crew taken care of him as if he had been a father determine.
“He’s the very same Uncle Verne that I knew again in 1985, the primary time I met him,” mentioned Nantz. “In fact, I used to be very acquainted with him earlier than I joined the CBS staff. We had been assigned to a Christmas Day soccer sport (the Blue-Grey Soccer Traditional) in 1985. I used to be in my mid-20s, and I discovered myself working a present with Verne Lundquist. That’s actually huge. I used to be nervous about it. The night time earlier than the sport, Verne and Nancy invited me to affix them for dinner, which meant lots. In quite a lot of methods, I believe that form of confirmed me what the CBS tradition was about, the way you act as a teammate. … Verne unknowingly was mentoring me even again then on the right way to be inclusive, be sort, be caring, deal with individuals like household. It meant lots.”
It was beautiful to listen to Lundquist’s name one final time as Ludvig Åberg, Max Homa, Collin Morikawa and Scottie Scheffler every hit No. 16 within the 6 p.m. ET hour. At 6:30 p.m., as Morikawa and Scheffler obtained massive applause from the group strolling No. 16, Nantz mentioned, “And Verne, that crowd might simply as properly be standing for you.”
There was Verne with one final birdie name when Scheffler took a 4-stroke lead.
“The hour belongs to Scottie Scheffler,” Lundquist mentioned because the eventual Masters champion left the outlet, however he actually might have been speaking about himself.
Verne, thanks for the recollections. pic.twitter.com/pUB5nTPWk9
— Golf on CBS ⛳ (@GolfonCBS) April 14, 2024
Within the post-Caitlin Clark period, how can ladies’s school basketball preserve TV momentum? Right here’s my piece on it.
A trio of sports activities media podcasts which may curiosity you:
• A dialog with ESPN’s vice chairman of name technique and content material analysis Flora Kelly. Kelly explains her function at ESPN, how that informs the corporate, how her analysis staff works, and the macro traits she sees in sports activities in 2024.
• A dialog with James Andrew Miller, the best-selling writer of books on CAA, ESPN, “Saturday Evening Reside,” and HBO. Miller discusses ESPN’s Norby Williamson, who had his hand in nearly all components of ESPN’s content material and enterprise areas, from programming, manufacturing and information throughout his almost 4 many years at ESPN.
• A dialog with Jon Lewis, the founder and editor of Sports activities Media Watch. Lewis discusses viewership for the ladies’s and males’s tournaments.
Some issues I learn during the last week that had been attention-grabbing to me (Notice: there are quite a lot of paywalls right here):
• The most effective piece I’ve learn this month — Forsaken: 14 years, 140 officers and a darkish secret that consumed a small Ontario city. How the Lucas Shortreed case was solved. By Jon Wells of The Hamilton Spectator.
• Kentucky accused of “complicity” as former swim coach allegedly dedicated sexual violence. By Katie Strang of The Athletic.
• A narco revolt takes a once-peaceful nation to the brink. By Samantha Schmidt and Arturo Torres of The Washington Publish.
• Masters of the Inexperienced: The Black Caddies of Augusta Nationwide. By Latria Graham of Backyard and Gun.
• O.J. Simpson’s Corridor of Fame spot could also be assured, however there’s no rule in opposition to some context. By Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports activities.
• What occurs if a technology of sports activities followers is swallowed up by playing? By Steve Buckley of The Athletic.
• Inside Amazon’s Push to Crack Dealer Joe’s — and Dominate All the pieces. By Dana Mattioli of The Wall Avenue Journal.
• To Construct Muscle, It’s the Units That Rely. By Alex Hutchinson of Exterior.
• America’s Subsequent Troopers Will Be Machines. By Jack Detsch of Overseas Coverage.
• Fifty years later, Henry Aaron’s legacy lives on in Atlanta and past. By Michael Lee of The Washington Publish.
• A Vigilante Hacker Took Down North Korea’s Web. Now He’s Taking Off His Masks. By Andy Greenberg of Wired.
• Check Your Train I.Q. The New York Occasions
• The Key Element Lacking From the Narrative About O.J. and Race. By Joel Anderson of Slate.
• Caitlin Clark delivered a profitable section on “Saturday Evening Reside.”
• Did One Man Simply Cease a Enormous Cyberattack? By Kevin Roose of The New York Occasions.
• How AI might rework baseball endlessly. By Josh Tyrangiel of The Washington Publish.
• What Occurred to Damages That O.J. Simpson Owed to the Victims’ Households? By Anna Betts of The New York Occasions.
(Picture of Verne Lundquist at Augusta Nationwide Golf Membership in 2012: Augusta Nationwide / Getty Photographs)